“More than anything, [there’s] a sense of relief and a sense of some real acknowledgement of the fact that people care about what we do,” Conley said.
Conley launched the institution in 1997 as the Black World History Wax Museum. Dignitaries came for the grand opening and visitors poured in to learn about local African-Americans who were left out of the history books. The figures include a man named York, an enslaved African who was promised his freedom in exchange for his instrumental role in the Lewis and Clark expedition. But the promise was broken and York returned to slavery.

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[/otw_shortcode_info_box][mashshare]The Griot Museum of Black HistoryOnly the second of its kind the country, The Griot Museum of Black History opened as The Black World History Wax Museum in February 1997. In 2009, we hit upon what seems to be the perfect name “The Griot Museum of Black History” (“The Griot”). In some African countries, the “griot,” (pronounced “GREE-OH”) is a highly respected member of the community who collects, preserves and shares the stories, objects, and cultural traditions of the community. Our new name more accurately reflects what we do — collect, preserve, and share the stories, culture, and history of Black people – particularly those with a regional connection to American history.

READ MORE ST. LOUIS PUBLIC RADIOMERGING ART+NEWSSharon McConnell-Dickerson Sharon McConnell-Dickerson is an artist, lecturer, and speaker. Her work is featured in numerous exhibitions and included in museum, university, and private art collections. Originally from New England, she worked as a flight attendant and chef on corporate jets. In addition to heads of major corporations, she flew with such notables as George and Barbara Bush, Donald and Ivana Trump, Al Haig, Henry Kissinger, and others.

After working in the corporate world for seven years, a turn in her life took place at the age of twenty-seven. She woke up in Chicago blind. She was eventually diagnosed with Uveitis, a degenerative eye disease. After several years of surgeries and treatments she became involved with sculpture. “Sculpture is the vehicle by which I access a lost sense,” she says. Sharon McConnell-Dickerson